Farmers struggle in Argentina as drought withers crops

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URQUIZA (AP) – The ground crackles as Guillermo Cuitino walks across dry farmland that should be green and lush this time of year. He grabs a soya plant and easily disintegrates its leaves with his hands.

“This year’s drought was extreme,” the agricultural engineer said this week at the farm where he works in Urquiza, a town about 230 kilometres from Argentina’s capital.

Cuitino normally has a policy of not walking on cultivated land, but everything is so dry now that there is absolutely nothing to damage – even weeds aren’t growing.

That scene is repeated in farms across Argentina, where harvesting should be in full swing but months of dry weather has ruined. Farmers are scrambling to make ends meet, and a sharp drop in expected revenue from exported farm products will deal a severe blow to Argentina’s shaky economy.

“This drought is unprecedented,” farmer Martín Sturla said, standing in the middle of his dusty fields in nearby San Antonio de Areco. “It’s Dantesque. No one has seen anything like it.”

The situation is particularly dire because Argentina had already been suffering two years of unusually dry weather.

Martin Sturla stands in in his dry soyabean field. PHOTO: AP

“The last two years were bad, but we always had some rain events that allowed us to get by,” Cuitino said.

Even experts are having trouble coming to terms with the crisis.

“There are no words to describe the impact of a campaign marked by all-time historical records: a deficit of rainfall for the third consecutive year in the summer, persistent heat waves until well into March, and agricultural frosts as late as October 2022 and as early as February 2023,” said a recent report by the Rosario Board of Trade.

“Crops, animals and natural resources have seen their conditions deteriorate week by week, leaving us on the eve of winter with a storm of losses,” it said.

In its latest weekly report, the Buenos Aires Grains Exchange said this year’s soyabean production would be around 25 million tonnes, down 44 per cent from the average for the last five cycles. Total wheat production, meanwhile, is forecast at 36 million tonnes, a 31 per cent drop from the previous year.

Osvaldo Bo has seen this first hand at his farm in Urquiza.

“We lost 90 per cent,” Bo said while showing off a field of dry corn. “I’ve never seen a drought like this, because there have been droughts where there was no soyabean, grain, but there was wheat and corn. But now, all harvests were lost.”

Taking into account the soyabean, wheat and corn harvest, which make up 87 per cent of Argentina’s grain production, losses will reach an estimated USD14.14 billion, according to the Rosario Board of Trade. The Regional Consortium of Agricultural Experimentation said in a recent report that the current condition will lead to almost USD20.5 billion in export losses.

Although many have been quick to attribute the drought to global warming, experts said it was not so simple.

“We have no evidence that it’s climate change for now,” said climate change researcher at the publicly funded CONICET research institute Anna Sörensson. “On the contrary, we see that precipitation has increased due to climate change.”

He added that there is “great certainty” the current drought was generated by the climate condition known as La Nina, which involves a cooling of the central Pacific that leads to changes in weather around the world. The phenomenon lasted much longer than normal this time.

Even if it isn’t directly responsible for the drought, climate change still plays a role, though, he said.

“What does happen due to climate change is that the heat waves become more frequent and more severe,” Sorensson said. That means “the soil dries more quickly”, he said.

Argentina has suffered the hottest summer since 1961, according to the country’s National Weather Service. In the capital, Buenos Aires, residents endured the hottest summer since records began in 1906. – Victor R Caivano